Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Gordon reaches end of road

Sunday will mark his final entry at Daytona, where he has 6 wins

- By David Whitley Staff writer See NASCAR, 5C

DAYTONA BEACH — With security guards watching for suspicious activity, Dave Shepherd had some explaining to do Friday. What was the contraptio­n bulging out of his backpack?

“A piece of a dashboard from my Jeff Gordon Monte Carlo,” he said.

That put him one up on most fans gathering for Sunday’s Coke Zero 400. Many of them want a piece of Gordon, who’s running his final race at Daytona Internatio­nal Speedway.

Shepherd brought his piece with him. He pried it out of his Gordon edition Chevrolet, put it in his suitcase and flew in from Sas- katchewan, Canada.

“It’s my first time down here: my first race, my first everything,” he said. “But it’s his retirement year, so I had to get to at least one race.”

Shepherd’s goals are to watch Gordon win and somehow get him to autograph that dashboard piece, though not necessaril­y in that order. For tens of thousands of other fans, a win by the No. 24 car would be satisfying enough.

A lot of them posed for pictures with a surplus No. 24 on Friday. It was parked at a Gordon Victory Lane of sorts in the infield, right next to a big sign that lists the driver’s feats at Daytona and relevant photos.

“Jeff, Thank You For The Memories,” it reads.

He’s gone from a rookie with a pencil-thin mustache and mullet hairdo in 1992 to a graying racing icon. And after Sunday night at some point, he will be gone.

It makes for a bitterswee­t twist to this weekend’s racing. Back in those mullet days, a lot of people couldn’t stand Gordon. They were easy to identify by the No. 3 T-shirts they were wearing.

Dale Earnhardt Sr. was the polar opposite of the California kid. He was from Kannapolis, N.C. — NASCAR country — and epitomized the gritty rough-edged racer in his black Chevrolet.

There were no tobacco stains on Gordon’s teeth or blemishes on his rainbowcol­ored DuPont car. He was handsome, well-spoken and Madison Avenuefrie­ndly.

The culture-shift rivalry was so natural it seemed almost scripted by NASCAR. Gordon’s first Winston Cup race was Richard Petty’s last one.

“He was the right man for the right time, right personalit­y,” Petty said. “A heck of a lot of ability, and he carried our sport.”

Gordon ushered in a new generation of fans and drivers. Denny Hamlin still has his Jeff Gordon Fan Club card from 1993. Sprint Cup rookie Kyle Larson was born a year before that.

“The DuPont car was one you always remembered,” he said.

Gordon drove it to titles in1994, ’97, ’99 and 2001. He had 55 wins before he turned 30 and seemed headed for 150 before retirement.

The second half of Gordon’s career wasn’t as successful as the first. His protégé Jimmie Johnson became the dominant driver. Gordon eased into the elder statesman role, giving millions of dollars to charity and promoting the sport just by being himself.

He won four races in 2014 and rolls into the Coke Zero 400 with 92 career wins. Combining the July races with February’s 500s, Gordon has six wins at Daytona.

But it’s restrictor-plate racing, where the field is leveled and winning often comes down to final-lap luck. Gordon hasn’t won this season, and the 43-year-old doesn’t sound confident that the race Sunday will break the drought.

“I would say it’s one of my worst chances,” Gordon said.

A win would certainly be a made-for-NBC happy ending at Daytona. But Gordon could finish last and still leave as a Daytona hero.

If anyone needs proof, all they have to do is check Shepherd’s backpack.

 ?? STEPHEN M. DOWELL/STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? Jeff Gordon signs autographs in the garage area Friday at Daytona Internatio­nal Speedway. He has 92 career NASCAR victories, but has declared that this will be his final season.
STEPHEN M. DOWELL/STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER Jeff Gordon signs autographs in the garage area Friday at Daytona Internatio­nal Speedway. He has 92 career NASCAR victories, but has declared that this will be his final season.
 ?? PATRICK SMITH/GETTY IMAGES ?? Jeff Gordon gets in his No. 24 Axalta Chevrolet during practice Friday for NASCAR’s Coke Zero 400 at Daytona.
PATRICK SMITH/GETTY IMAGES Jeff Gordon gets in his No. 24 Axalta Chevrolet during practice Friday for NASCAR’s Coke Zero 400 at Daytona.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States